U.S. News lowers Hopkins med rank
After holding the number two spot for 13 years, the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine has slipped to third place in the U.S. News and World Report's rankings of the nation's best medical schools for 2005.
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After holding the number two spot for 13 years, the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine has slipped to third place in the U.S. News and World Report's rankings of the nation's best medical schools for 2005.
Dr. Edward E. Cornwell III, a prominent associate professor of surgery at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, elaborated on an affliction that has been plaguing the nation for decades in the final lecture of the spring 2004 Voyage and Discovery Lecture Series.
Political commentator and Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer addressed an audience of Hopkins students and local residents Tuesday night to discuss what he described as a "Ray of Hope" for the Israeli community in the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Author and commentator Tariq Ali spoke about the war in Iraq and the pressing need for public resistance Monday afternoon to a crowded audience of Hopkins students, faculty, and Baltimore area residents at the Homewood campus' Mudd Hall.
Sometimes it's not about the policies or the politics, but about people.
When Homewood freshman Archana Shah wants a quick meal on the go outside of University residential dining life, her choice is between Taco Bell and Subway.
Three Hopkins graduate schools were recognized as being top ten in the nation this year, including the School of Medicine, Bloomberg School of Public Health and the School of Nursing, by the U.S. News & World Report's 2004 edition of Best Graduate Schools.
A panel discussion about illegal music sharing on the Internet and its impact on the popular music was held Saturday, Nov. 9, in the Donovan Room of Gilman Hall.
This month's Student Activities Commission (SAC) General Assembly (GA) meeting, which took place in the Glass Pavilion Monday evening, lasted 18 minutes and had close to perfect attendance of its 250 members, according to SAC Chair Elise Roecker.
New measures have been put into place to ensure the proper production and distribution of the 2002-2003 Johns Hopkins yearbook, the Hullabaloo, after last year's yearbook was a total of four months overdue.
Thirty Johns Hopkins freshmen are being housed at the Hopkins Inn this year due to an increase in the enrollment yield, school officials said this week.